Derrick Broze has long contributed here on Hive, and across the field of political journalism. I have admired his earnest and insightful work for just as long, digging into the heart of matters of immense import to us all, always with an eye to freedom and an ear to ordinary folks. He correctly points out that the Summit of the Future is fast approaching and most of us know nothing about it, or what (((they))) intend to achieve with it. His post dives into the nuts and bolts and the nuts and dolts that are trying to take over the world and are using this summit and pact to do it. He does a great job of pointing out the important parts concisely, so have a watch at the linked post above (or below).
IMG source - Odysee.com/@theconsciousresistance
His discussion of the intentions of the NWO to use emergencies to seize control of the Earth's resources and cut us off was chilling. I began writing a response to his post, but after a couple pages realized it wouldn't be appropriate to clog his blog with it. I have long advocated adopting decentralized means of production, more so as more of them become viable. I want to point out that it is we, not the NWO, that are today in the driver's seat - if we want to be. I left an ample comment there, but continue it here, below.
You cite their claim this is a 'once in a generation' opportunity. It's more than that. Humanity is transcending a clinal boundary in the tools we have and how we use them that dramatically transforms society. Our overlords have made it pretty clear what they want for our future, and what they're planning to do to get it, as you discuss in the OP. I have a different vision for the future I want for me and my posterity, and for you, and everyone else on Earth. I don't want us reduced to utter penury, owning nothing. I'm pretty sure we won't be happy impoverished and ruled by plutocrats. Looking back at history, which is full of such circumstances, I don't see many examples of such societies being very happy. I see a lot of revolutions that ended badly for everyone, though.
So, I'd much prefer if they didn't get their emergencies. Big Ag is the worst offender, and the bulk of their potential emergencies seem to be environmentally based, so preventing Big Ag from further destruction of the environment seems the best and most productive route to stop them in their tracks. I'll start there.
I have seen aquaponics systems in apartments I worked in locally. The couple not only met their needs, but surpassed them considerably for market purposes. Every bit of their production was inside their home, with the hydroponics creating an incredible indoor garden through clever design. No one has to buy food anymore. Any place people can live they can grow food. Very tight quarters, slums without much sunlight or access to electricity for LED lights, have greater challenges by far, but there are ways for folks in such situations to work together to resolve their common challenges. Folks with ordinary apartments, where utilities like electricity are reliable, can easily automate much of the work, running bubblers or pumps, lights, and timers for schedules. The entirety of Big Ag is under threat because humanity is gaining production capacity that scales to individual households, and not massive factory farms requiring hoards of capital. Even better, growing indoors enables pest control to consist of screen doors. No biocides necessary. Also, by growing your own you get to determine what varieties you grow. Monsanto will grow GMO crops resistant to RoundUp. You can grow any heirloom you want, purple carrots, blue corn, whatever tickles your fancy or your tastebuds.
Growing our own food with aquaponics enables us to transform our living spaces into truly alive and living spaces, indoor gardens and fountains, conservancies of rare or particularly beautiful plants (no one says they all have to be for food). We determine the nutrient content of our food. We can pick it exactly when it's ripe. Because we grow indoors we can grow tropicals that bear fruit that can't be shipped. Although I live in Oregon, I knew a guy that grew bananas, because he grew indoors. In every way the quality of the food we grow for ourselves can be vastly higher than the crap we buy at Shartmart. Because the plants are fed by fish, not commercial fertilizers, we don't have to buy commercial fertilizers, or pollute the environment.
I'm sure many people would like to have an occasional pomegranate, but don't want to, or can't, dedicate space for a pomegranate tree, or an avocado tree. There are some crops that most people will want to trade for or buy from specialist growers, even if they grow most of their food themselves, and many tree fruits and exotic spices, like black pepper and vanilla may be a good niche for such specialists. However, things like turmeric and ginger make beautiful houseplants, and really delicious food too.
Of course, not everything has to be grown indoors. Root vegetables like potatoes, carrots, and turnips are very easy to grow outdoors in almost any climate. There's plenty of space for traditional gardening for folks with a mind to. I grew turnips, beets, potatoes, carrots, onions, and garlic outdoors last year, and I am still reaping the benefit from them, because, unlike commercial farmers, I don't have to pick the whole crop at once. I can pull a few for dinner for the next week, and leave the rest in the soil, where they won't spoil or shrivel up like they might in the fridge. Throwing up some greenhouses in cooler climes will enable tropical trees to be grown outside of our living spaces (if you separate them), if you have the space and funds. However, for ordinary aquaponics you literally only need to spend money on seeds, whatever aquatic species you want to grow you can't catch (almost everyone has some kind of catfish and crawdads around), some used gutters and growing medium (clay balls you can actually make yourself), and a barrel or tote(s) for the fish. You don't need pumps or bubblers because you can manually water the plants with a bucket. You don't need LED lights if you have sunny windows or grow outdoors. However, aquarium bubblers and LED lights are cheap, so automating the watering and growing where there's no sunny window is pretty inexpensive. The thing about aquaponics is that it doesn't have to take one square centimeter of natural environment away from ecosystems, doesn't pollute, doesn't endanger wild species, and etc. By this means we can prevent the planetary emergency(s) the NWO is causing with Big Ag and needs to declare to seize global governmental power.
This isn't only happening in agriculture, but in every industry on Earth.
About a week ago I read that researchers had managed to turn graphene into a semiconductor. Ordinary inkjet printers can print graphene, and have long been used to print electrical circuits, solar panels, and more. Being able to print IC chips means Open Source Hardware ends the huge expense of silicon chip manufacturing, and the massive factories necessary. Earlier this year I read that ordinary concrete doped with lamp black (pure carbon/soot) was used to make a supercapacitor, which means lithium and exotic metals are no longer necessary for big house batteries, replacing the PowerWall with the PowerFloor/Foundation. The first 3D printed rocket launched in March 2023. Terran 1 proved 3D printing was viable, and now almost every space manufacturing company is turning to 3D printing. Odysseus, the last craft to land on the moon, used a 3D printed rocket motor. The sky's not the limit anymore.
With these tools we can head off the WEF/NWO at the pass. We can prevent the emergencies they need to declare to impose their exclusive control of global commons. Jo Zayner and friends made their own vaccine for Covid - although Youtube deleted their videos - using CRISPR, and that shows that we don't need to accept any toxic trash Big Pharma wants to GMO us with. Laser cutters, CNC machines, Cricut (for making clothes), AI running on laptops, more and more and better and better table top technologies for producing the goods and services that create the blessings of civilization are becoming available to individuals at an ever faster pace. It's not just Big Ag that is threatened with extinction by aquaponics, but Big everything is obsolete. Big Pharma, Big Finance, Big Government, all of these Big Parasitic industrial collectives are necessary to Big Overlords. They need Big Markets to tap for their Big Products, and when we make our own stuff they don't get a cut, while we get bespoke goods designed for our specific applications.
IMHO, they're becoming increasingly desperate as we develop and disperse decentralized means of production across the population. As more of us put these tools to work, more people that wouldn't have considered it find out it's vastly better than buying mass produced crap from Shartmart. There's a boundary that produces exponential change. Things go along for a while seemingly normal, while the low numbers of early adopters double, and double again, until suddenly everybody's doing it, and the world has changed forever. It's a race between that adoption boundary and global takeover, between centralization and overlords it creates, and decentralization and the freedom and felicity that creates. You [Derrick Broze] and James Corbett rightly seek to focus on solutions to the problems we are facing, and it seems to me that reaching that clinal boundary before the NWO can declare the global government and cut us off from Earth's resources is a key to preventing catastrophe for many, maybe most of us. The more we make ourselves, the less wealth and power overlords parasitize, the less harm and destruction they can mete out to the environment in support of their emergency declarations, and the more robust and resistant to deprivation we, and the environment, become. One more technology seems poised to bring this all together and create holistic systems that cover all the bases without waste or excess: AI. Just last week I read that MIT Technology Review published a paper describing how robotics was poised to become vastly more competent using the same kind of neural net and large model learning that has made such a splash with AI writing, art, and music. Well, this same approach to management of decentralized production can enable all these different technologies to work together and meet the needs of individual households precisely, as well as gradually, adding one system at a time, as needed, or as capacity grows.
I note that in 'The Limits to Growth' Alexander King and Aurelio Peccei claimed people were our own enemy. I disagree. It is corporations, that are inhuman, inhumane, and enable psychopaths, also inhuman and inhumane, to rise to control, that wreak all the harms King points to in his screed. That is humanities common enemy, and who we are more than ample to meet and defeat by taking our own counsel and providing for our needs ourselves.
I'd like to see humanity become immune to technocratic totalitarian tyranny. I've been trying to round up a site and some funding for putting these systems all into packages, which as you can imagine, takes a bit of planning and familiarity with a wide variety of production tools, but I have work I do seven days a week, and have no experience with robotics/AI, so I'd have to weasel out of work and get some funding to learn to do it, which I haven't managed yet. There is a market here for a planning system to design aquaponics systems for people that don't have experience gardening and are daunted by the problem of balancing inputs and outputs, the needs of the plants with the needs of the fish, menu planning, and etc. What specific equipment to buy, how to set it up, and how to ease into the hobby in a graceful way, are all things that would really help folks make the transition to aquaponics from store bought food. I know @klye knows something about AI. I bet all the useful people I know also have full time gigs though. Frankly I'd work for nothing, just to make it happen, so if anyone can fund some of these tools and/or provide AI/robotics expertise to put them into automated packages, don't be shy.